'Apart from his radiant gifts as a colourist Ceri Richards is also an exceptionally rare draughtsman. In his best work... these two attributes combine together with singular power and persuasiveness.'- B. Robertson, Ceri Richards: A Retrospective Exhibition (exh. cat.), Whitechapel Art Gallery, London, 1960, p.3
With the outbreak of war, Richards left his teaching at Chelsea School of Art, and colleagues including Henry Moore and Graham Sutherland, and spent a short time as a farm labourer in Suffolk, before he was appointed head of painting at the Cardiff School of Art, in Wales, where he also contributed to the war effort as a Home Guard on night watches. Returning to London in 1944, Richards returned to his post at Chelsea, also teaching at the Slade and the RCA, and was represented by Marlborough Fine Art.
Richards went on to win international prizes, becoming a trustee of the Tate, and in 1960 the Whitechapel Art Gallery mounted a major retrospective of his work. In 1962, Richards represented Britain at the Venice Biennale.